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Media
Contact:
Dr. Fred Gould,
919/515-1647
Dr. Neal Blair,
919/515-7883
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Dec.
3, 2002
Scientists
Find New Way to Assess Where Cotton-Killing Pests Develop
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
In
a finding that could have broad implications for farmers'
ability to stop pests from decimating cotton crops,
scientists from North Carolina State University and
agricultural research stations in the Cotton Belt have
developed a new technique to determine where the larvae
of certain agricultural pests develop.
The
study, which looks at the characteristics of the moths
that the larvae turn into, shows that a large majority
of late-season moths in the Cotton Belt - specifically
Helicoverpa zea, a major pest of cotton commonly
known as the cotton bollworm - are not developing on
cotton and soybean plants, as the prevailing theory
suggests, but are developing instead on plants like
corn.
The
research suggests that this non-toxic corn, therefore,
provides a major refuge for H. zea moths, and
as such is critical to halting the evolution of insecticide-immune
pests, perhaps more so than existing small cotton refuges.
The
scientists published their work in Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences.
Although
it seems counterintuitive, non-toxic refuges are essential
to controlling pests like the cotton bollworm because
the pests that come from these refuges have little to
no immunity to toxins. It is estimated that about 80
to 95 percent of cotton bollworms are killed by transgenic
cotton plants that produce Bt toxin - derived from the
bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis - leaving a fair number
of potentially immune caterpillars moving about. When
these immune pests mate with pests from non-toxic plants,
offspring are not immune to the Bt toxin, and are likely
susceptible to die a Bt toxin-induced death.
The
scientists - including NC State's Dr. Fred Gould, William
Neal Reynolds Professor of entomology, and Dr. Neal
Blair, professor of marine, earth and atmospheric sciences;
representatives from the USDA's Southern Crops Research
Lab in College Station, Texas, and the Louisiana Agricultural
Experiment Station in Bossier City, La.; and two NC
State students -used a novel technique called stable
isotope assessment to gauge the origination of moths
in late summer. The work was supported by the USDA Biotechnology
Risk Assessment Program and the W.M. Keck Center for
Behavioral Biology.
The
scientists compared the ratios of carbon isotopes 13C
and 12C in moths captured over three- and four-year
periods from August to October in areas of Louisiana
and Texas. These so-called stable isotopes are present
in every living organism and in the air. Plants with
a certain type of photosynthesis - those with C3 physiology,
like cotton - are more depleted in 13C relative to 12C
than plants with C4 physiology, like corn. Thus, looking
at these ratios in moth wing tissue can provide clues
to where the moths grew up, the researchers assert.
And
knowing where the moths develop gives researchers clues
to how refuges - plants that are not treated with insecticides
- are working to put the brakes on the evolution of
pests that are genetically resistant to insecticides.
Currently,
about 60 percent of cotton grown in the Cotton Belt
contains Bt toxin. The Environmental Protection Agency
allows the planting of 50 percent Bt corn in cotton-growing
areas, as opposed to 80 percent Bt corn in regions where
cotton is not grown, Gould says. This policy assumes
that H. zea moths migrate from the Cotton Belt
to northern Corn Belt states in the summer, but do not
return in the fall.
But,
since less than 50 percent of late-season moths captured
in the study were fed as larvae on cotton, they may
be migrating from the Corn Belt, Gould says. This means
the traditional assumptions about late-season H.
zea moths - that they grow up on cotton, migrate
to northern Corn Belt states and then die - seem to
be wrong.
"Corn
is most likely serving as the predominant alternate
C4 host for H. zea," the paper asserts.
"Currently, less than 25 percent of U.S. corn produces
Bt toxin. If, in the future, most field corn planted
in the northern and southern United States remains in
non-Bt producing varieties, it could serve as a major
H. zea refuge. Maintaining the current limit
of 50 percent non-Bt corn in cotton-growing areas therefore
seems appropriate for maintaining the long-term utility
of Bt cotton."
"In
the short term, this is good news for cotton farmers,"
Gould says. "It shows that corn can provide a refuge
so cotton farmers don't have to increase the non-toxic
cotton refuge."
Gould
says that problems can set in if Bt corn begins becoming
ubiquitous in the Corn Belt. Fewer refuge plants - non-Bt
corn, in this case - could allow pests' resistance to
Bt toxin to evolve more quickly, he says.
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kulikowski -
Note
to editors: An abstract of the paper follows.
"Bt
Resistance Management: Stable Isotope Assessment of
Alternate Host Use by Helicoverpa Zea"
Authors: Fred Gould, Neal Blair, Tracy L. Rennie,
M. Reid, North Carolina State University; J. Lopez,
Southern Crops Research Laboratory; S. Micinski, Louisiana
Agricultural Experiment Station
Published: Dec. 2, 2002, in Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences
Abstract:
Data have been lacking on the proportion of H. zea
larvae that develop on non-cotton host plants that can
serve as a refuge from selection pressure for adaptation
to Bt-cotton. We found that individual H. zea moths
that develop as larvae on cotton and other plants with
C3 physiology have a different ratio of 13C to 12C than
moths that develop on plants with C4 physiology, such
as corn. We used this finding in determining the minimum
percentage of moths that developed on non-cotton hosts
in 2 cotton-growing areas. Our results indicate that
local corn can serve as a refuge for H. zea in
mid-summer. Our results contrast dramatically with the
prevailing hypothesis that the large majority of late-season
moths are produced from larvae feeding on cotton, soybean
and other C3 plants. Typically, less than 50 percent
of moths captured in August through October have isotope
ratios indicative of larval feeding on C3 plants. In
one October sample, 100 percent of the moths originated
from C4 hosts even though C4 crops were harvested at
least one month earlier, and no common wild C4 hosts
were available. These findings support other research
indicating that many late-season H. zea moths
captured in Louisiana and Texas are migrants whose larvae
developed on corn in more northern locations. Our isotope
data on moths collected in Texas early in the season
indicate that the majority of overwintering H. zea
do not originate from cotton feeding larvae, and may
be migrants from Mexico. Non-Bt Corn, in Mexico and
the U.S. Corn Belt, appears to serve as an important
refuge for H. zea.
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